How To Design A Sticky Site: Stickiness Part I

As visual designers our goal is to communicate ideas and messages to an audience. We want our audience to remember the ideas we’ve conveyed to them long after they’ve left our sites and we want them to share those ideas with friends and acquaintances. We want our messages to be understood and to stick.

Some ideas seem to get passed around from one person to another until they become part of the cultural consciousness. Other ideas never make it past a person or two. Why do some ideas seem to thrive, while others die quickly?

How can we create sticky designs that allow the ideas we want to communicate live long healthy lives.

What is Stickiness?

Stickiness is a way to greatly increase the recognition and recall and sharing of an idea. It’s about communicating something and having that something spread far and wide. It’s about having people remember something and share it with friends. It’s about the something you communicated living and moving far beyond the place it was initially conveyed.

If you search the web for how to make a website sticky, you’ll find plenty of advice for using related links or requesting comments, advice designed to keep people on your site longer. This isn’t what’s generally meant by the term sticky.

The advice (good advice by the way) is designed to get people to stay on your site. Stickiness is about having your site stick with people after they’ve left.

Sticky ideas are understood, remembered, and shared. And just as important they’re effective at changing people’s thoughts and behaviors. If you’ve ever come across an article or image or story that you seem to encounter wherever you turn, the article, image, or story was a sticky one.

The term stickiness (or stickiness factor) was first publicized by Malcolm Gladwell in his book The Tipping Point. Later the Heath brothers, Chip and Dan, wrote a book Made to Stick, in which they identify and share the characteristics and traits of ideas that stick. If you haven’t read either, I’d highly recommend both. Most of this post comes from the latter book.

How Do You Make Ideas Stick?

Your audience has a lot to do with whether or not your idea sticks. After all they’re the ones who’ll be sharing your ideas and helping it to spread. You need to communicate the idea to them and they need to communicate it to others. In order for an idea to stick it’s audience needs to

Chip and Dan have identified 6 key variables with the acronym (SUCCESs – the last ‘s’ being silent) that make ideas stick. They correspond directly to the 5 items above with a 6th item (listed first) for creating the idea itself.

I want to take a look at each of the 6 key variables in a little more depth and doing so will take more than a single post. We’ll look at the idea of simplicity, finding the core of your idea, today and over the next couple or three weeks look at the variables that go into communicating your core idea.

Even with a short series of posts we’ll only have scratched the surface so I’d urge you to read Made to Stick if you haven’t and while you’re at it read The Tipping Point too.

Simplicity—Finding the Core of Your Idea

The first step in creating a sticky idea is to express the idea simply and succinctly. You want to get to the heart of the message. You want to find the core (PDF) of the message.

Simple = core + compact

Finding the core of your message keeps what’s important in focus. It strips away everything superfluous and brings the essence of the idea into light.

Think of the inverted pyramid style of journalism. The lead is always the most important part of any article. It’s what the entire article is about summed up in a sentence or two and it’s located at the very start of the article. If you were to read only the article’s lead and nothing more, you’d still get the most important information the article is trying to convey.

An article can only have one lead. Same goes for your sticky idea. If you try to say too much you inevitably say nothing. Your main message would get lost within the other unessential messages. It’s the principle of choices, which tells us less options makes it easier to choose.

A single essential message within an idea will stick more readily than a variety of essential and unessential messages in an idea. Simple is sticky

Consider the proverb above and think about how much it communicates as simple as it is. It’s core is a warning against greed. The bird in your hand is tonight’s dinner. You already have it. The 2 birds in the bush may be tonight and tomorrow night’s dinners, but you don’t have them.

What you have is worth more than possibility of what you might have. It’s better to have a small and certain advantage than the potential for a greater one.

Whether or not you agree with the advice, it’s pretty clear the idea has been a sticky one having survived some 7 or 8 centuries. The idea is simple, compact, and profound.

The Curse of Knowledge

Once you become an expert on a subject it can be hard to communicate ideas about that subject to those who aren’t experts. You’ll naturally use terms and concepts that to you are simple, but to the novice are complex and confusing. This is the curse of knowledge.

We’ll revisit the concept again when talking about concreteness, but I mention it here as a reminder of how difficult it can be to strip away everything to find the core of an idea. Remember that you’re communicating these ideas to someone who likely has a lot less knowledge about the subject than you do.

Conveying Complexity in Simple Ideas

What do you do when you need to communicate a lot of information in a single idea or message? The way to simply communicate complexity is by making use of your audience’s existing schemas.

A schema is a mental framework that helps organize and interpret information. Schema’s carry with them a variety of ideas and concepts.

For example if i say sports car you can easily imagine one. i don’t need to tell you that a sports car has 4 wheels and 2 doors and a sleek aerodynamic shape. I don’t have to tell you it’s fast and handles turns around corners well. Those concepts are all carried in your schema of a sports car.

In Made to Stick Chip and Dan use the example of a Pomelo.

A pomelo is the largest citrus fruit. The rind is very thick, but soft and easy to peel away. The resulting fruit has a light yellow to coral pink flesh and can vary from juicy to slightly dry and from seductively spicy-sweet to to tangy and tart.

That might help you picture what a pomelo is. How about this.

A pomelo is basically an oversized grapefruit with a very thick and soft rind.

Both explanations above describe a pomelo, but the latter makes use of your schema for a grapefruit. It’s a much more succinct description and likely forms the stronger image. It’s far more memorable than the first description and has a greater chance of sticking.

Think of analogies, metaphors, and to a lesser degree similes. Each attempts to communicate complex information by using an existing schema. The new information is built on or compared to a wealth of existing knowledge you already have.

Conveying Simple Ideas in Web Design

What ways can we use the above information when designing a site? The first thing is to understand the core idea or goal of the site. Why does the site exist? What’s its purpose? What is it trying to do? These are questions you should be asking before beginning any design.

We can carry the idea of finding the core to each page of the site as well. What goal does any given page have? How can we design the page to push people toward that goal.

Generally a site and even a page will have more than a singular goal. Your site might exist to make a sale, generate a lead, convert a visitor to subscriber and so on. Still it should have a primary idea or message to communicate.

Think of a tagline? Isn’t your tagline meant to simply and succinctly sum up what your site and business is about? Isn’t a tagline the core idea behind your site.

When someone lands on any page of your site they should be able to understand what the site is about instantly. This is usually done through a combination of the site name, the company logo, the tagline. On the single page it would also include the main heading. Consider the idea of simplicity in all of these.

We might also add in the idea of unity and harmony across a site. A unified design is one where everything is working together to communicate the same central message. When all your design elements agree they create a whole that is greater than the sum of its parts. They help to place the focus on what’s most important.

Stripping away the unessential might also lead us toward minimalism. I don’t think the idea of simplicity means we should only create minimalist designs, but it does imply that any design we create should be effective when we strip away the eye candy and it does imply that no matter what style, your design should only include what’s necessary to communicate your message.

A designer knows he has achieved perfection not when there is nothing left to add, but when there is nothing left to take away
—Antoine de Saint-Exupery

When there’s nothing left to take away you’re left with the core.

Summary

If a tree falls in the forest does it make a sound? If an idea doesn’t stick, does it have any value? An idea that falls away the moment it’s uttered has no power. It could be the most brilliant idea in the world, but so what.

The first step of making your ideas stick is the idea itself. Your idea needs to be simple and succinct. You need to strip everything away and find the core of the idea. Only then does the idea have a chance to stick.

The next step in making your idea stick is to communicate it to others in a way that makes them want to share it further. We’ll begin looking at how to communicated your simple idea next week.

I wish I could take credit for creating the graphic Graham, but I can’t. I can take credit for choosing them though. They all come from either Flickr Creative Commons images or Deviant Art. You can click any image and go to the source.

Conveying an idea from a layman point of view can be difficult for experts. I always like to test things on friends or colleagues that have no knowledge of the subject that is being designed and seeing if they get from the website the message we are trying to convey.

It’s not easy. I find myself stumbling over certain design and development concepts when trying to explain things to clients. I can usually find a way to get the message across and understood, but it’s so easy to fall into language that someone not as familiar with the subject shouldn’t be expected to know.

The cardinal rule to get someone to stick to your site long enough to get and spread your message is simple but hard to accomplish. GET THEIR ATTENTION.
This is a simple answer, but getting their is the hard part. There are no formulas or rules, just a thought process who’s only goal is to standout amongst the crowd. Don’t expect any concrete conclusions they are foolish. Creating a STICK is best left to those of us who can imagine the imagine-less.

Getting attention is definitely part of it. It’s only one part though. For example if you get someone’s attention and they don’t understand what you’re saying it doesn’t do anything useful for you. I think all 6 ideas of stickiness are important and they all work together.

Thanks Jacqueline. I’m glad you liked the article. Read the book Made to Stick if you liked this article. It does a much better job talking about the subject than I ever could. It’s a quick and enjoyable read too.